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Man killed in horror incident after tractor ploughs into parked cars at vintage car show

Man killed in horror incident after tractor ploughs into parked cars at vintage car show

Daily Record10-08-2025
The show remains closed today following the incident on Saturday night.
A man has died in a horror accident after a tractor ploughed into parked cars at a vintage car show.

The incident at the event in Fiddington, near Tewkesbury, Gloucestershire, saw the tractor, which had been driven through fields beforehand, collide with "hedges and some stationery vehicles" at around 11.25pm on Saturday, August 9.

The man, a passenger in his 50s, sustained serious injuries. Members of the public provided first aid before emergency services arrived, but paramedics were unable to save him.

His family and the local coroner have been notified of his death, the Mirror reports.
Gloucestershire Constabulary said in a statement that a man in his 20s had been arrested afterwards, on suspicion of causing death by dangerous driving. The force added that the show, which was immediately halted following the crash, would remain closed on Sunday.
A spokesperson said: "A man aged in his 20s, who is believed to have been driving the tractor, was arrested on suspicion of causing death by dangerous driving and driving while unfit through alcohol.

"The Severn Vale Vintage Club annual show had taken place at the location yesterday. Due to the incident, the organiser has said the event will be closed today."
An appeal for information has since been launched, with police requesting anybody with information or who witnessed the incident to come forward.
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In an unrelated incident, a Fatal Accident Inquiry into the tragic death of a Glasgow schoolboy at a building site has concluded.
Shea Ryan, 10, died from a head injury on July 16, 2020 after he climbed through an unsecured fence within the site in Drumchapel, and fell 20ft down an incomplete manhole.
A sheriff has ruled that two contracting firms failed to take 'reasonable and sufficient measures' to protect the public from danger at the site.
The sheriff identified multiple precautions that could 'realistically have resulted in the accident and Shea's death being avoided".
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